Selectivity of a Copper Oxide CO2 Reduction Electrocatalyst Shifted by a Bioinspired pH-Sensitive Polymer

Abstract

A bioinspired polymeric membrane capable of shifting the selectivity of a copper oxide electrocatalyst in the CO2 reduction reaction is described. The membrane is deposited on top of copper oxide thin films from wet deposition techniques under controlled conditions of humidity and self-assembles into an arranged network of micrometer-sized pores throughout the polymer cross-section. The membrane was composed of a block copolymer with a precisely controlled ratio of poly-4-vinylpyridine and poly(methyl methacrylate) blocks (PMMA-b-P4VP). The intrinsic hydrophobicity, together with the porous nature of the membrane’s surface, induces a Cassie–Baxter wetting transition above neutral pH, resulting in water repulsion from the catalyst surface. As a consequence, the catalyst’s surface is shielded from surrounding water molecules under CO2 electroreduction reaction conditions, and CO2 molecules are preferentially located in the vicinity of the catalytically active area. The CO2 reduction reaction is therefore kinetically favored over the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER).

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

CDU Subject

Subject

Química

Pages

32 p.

Publisher

ACS Publications

Grant Agreement Number

The international Chair INTERMAT of E.P. and ENSUITE Hub have received funding from E2S UPPA an ANR PIA4 project.

F.V., P.M., L.C. and A.V. thank E2S UPPA for their fellowships.

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Documents

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces 2024_Selectivity of a Copper Oxide CO2 Reduction Electrocatalyst.pdf

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CC-BY 4.0

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